Native name | Administración de Ferrocarriles del Estado |
---|---|
Company type | State-owned |
Industry | Rail transport |
Predecessor | Central UR (CUR) Midland UR North Western UR Northern UR |
Founded | 1952 |
Headquarters | , |
Services | Public transport |
Owner | Government of Uruguay |
Website | afe.com.uy |
The State Railways Administration of Uruguay (Spanish: Administración de Ferrocarriles del Estado), or AFE, is the autonomous agency of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay charged with rail transport and the maintenance of Uruguayan railways.
On 31 December 1948, Parliament approved projects for acquiring foreign railroads, discharging part of the £17 million which was owed to Uruguay by the United Kingdom because of purchases made during World War II. On 31 January 1949, the railroads were nationalized. That August, the executive branch of government proposed to the General Assembly the creation of a body known as the Land Transport Management of the State (ATTE), charged with the following:
The monopoly would gradually prepare to take over private enterprises, and the proposal was based on the need to avoid ruinous competition. Having difficulty obtaining approval, the Executive decided not to pursue the proposal and allow the new entity to limit its function to the operation of rail transport. Meanwhile, between 31 January 1949 and 19 September 1952 the country held two state railways: the Ferrocarril Central del Uruguay (for nationalized companies) and the state railway and tram network, which remained at the forefront of its former operations. The two companies were merged with the creation of the State Railways Administration (AFE) on 19 September 1952.
Uruguayan railways have approximately 2,900 kilometres (1,800 mi) of track, all 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge, diesel traction and with only 11 kilometres (6.8 mi) of double track. Half of the network is closed, with freight trains circulating branches from Montevideo – Rivera – Livramento; Piedra Sola – Three Trees; Sayago – Minas; Verdum – Plant ANCAP; Carnelli – La Teja; Chamberlain – Paysandú – Salto – Concordia and Algorta – Fray Bentos. The branch from August 25 – San Jose – Ombucitos is under renovation, and the stretch to San Jose was reopened for passenger service in December 2006.[1]
Passenger service is provided by three suburban lines, starting from Montevideo to the north (to Florida, 109 km), the west (San Jose, 96 km sharing Line 63 to August 25) and the northeast (Mr. Victor Sudriers, 44 km, sharing the first 8 km with the other two). Since 1 March 2003, passenger trains depart and arrive at a new terminal 500 meters north of the Central Station in Montevideo (which has been closed); this entailed a loss of more than 100,000 passengers.[2] The State Railways Administration is the administrator of the rail network. It permits movement of rolling stock from other companies and institutions, and several have their own cars and locomotives (ANCAP, AUAR, CEFU, CUCP).
In 2019, after UPM Kymmene started the construction of a new Wood Pulp mill in Pueblo Centenario, near Tacuarembo's Paso de Los Toros and wanted to use rail transport to move the processed pulp from the plant to Montevideo's Harbor and move the chemicals used from the same Harbor to the plant; this resulted in the greenlighting of the "Ferrocarril Central" (Esp:Central Railway) project, named with the name of the previous owner of the line to be rebuilt, the licitation winner was "Grupo Via Central" (Esp:Central Track Group) formed by Uruguayans engineering companies "Saceem" and "Berkes" alongside Spaniard Sacyr and French company NGE; the Friday June 14 of 2019 the last Montevideo-25 de Agosto service left the New Terminal ending rail circulation before the dismantling of all the tracks in the central branch between Montevideo and Pueblo Centenario
The project sparked many controversies including ambiental and political ones against what was called "UPM's train" by its detractors and calling for additional inversions in Passenger services even while the MTOP (Ministry of Transport and Public Infrastructure works) explained than passenger services were deficient and that the presence of fixed freight client was needed to make the rebuilding of the tracks economically viable; Alongside this came a restructuring of AFE in an open access system allowing private circulation in AFE's tracks by paying fees and the redistribution of employees that worked aboard passenger trains to administrative roles
Originally planned as a 3-year project started by dismantling the old tracks by removing the bolts and plates keeping the track segments together and lading them in trucks using heavy machinery (allowing the posterior installation of the old tracks in other branches of the rail network with heavily degraded tracks) and the remotion of the rail crossing equipment (consisting of a mix of 20th Century electro-mechanical systems and Safetrans electronic equipment from the late 2000s) followed by expropriation of adjacent lots to the track in preparation for an ampliation of its width; In the following years ground movement and auxiliary works started including the construction of two trenches, one in the Capirro Neighborhood of Montevideo with a length of 800m and another one in Las Piedras city with 1200m of length (including the historic station that was conserved while a new subway-like station was built underground), the construction of a new undertrack bypass for Route 102 (also allowing the route to bypass Cesar Mayo Gutierrez street) and the replacing the access Viaduct at Canelones and multiple additional bypasses in many other streets and cities, the government also greenlighted the construction of a Harbor access Viaduct in the Rambla separating high-speed transit ingression and leaving Montevideo from the low-speed freight transit in the Harbor and the future rail transport. The track installation began in late 2022 with the installation of new continuously weld rails over Uruguayan sleeper (made Spanish company Sateba's engineering and local materials) keep together with Vossloh joints, followed with installation of Revenga RailRox level crossing equipment and European Train Control System compatible systems with the new track (double between the New Central Station including the Harbor's branch and Villa Felicidad neighborhood in Progreso, Canelones) being completed the Monday November 20 of 2023 with track testing started in the succeeding days
UPM's chosen freight operator was finally Portren, a joint venture composed by the Deutsche Bahn from Germany, CHR Group and Cointer Concessions, with the previously done contract allowing them use of 45% of the daily capacity of the new tracks and allowing other operators to use the remaining 55%. Protren's rolling stock is composed by 7 Stadler Euro 4001 (the first of their class in the continent) from Valencia, 120 wood pulp wagons and 20 sulfuric acid wagons made by Talleres Allecria in Spain. The first locomotive to leave the port was the Portren04 Locomotive, moved by truck because the tracks were not completed. Then, Portren02 and Portren05 left by themselves in December (4th and 18th respectively), with Portren02 carrying three wood pulp wagons (103,111 and 116) while Portren05 carried a longer formation.
AFE rolling stock consists of: